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Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5

Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

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Page 1: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Water Balance & Excretion

9.4 & 9.5

Page 2: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Osmoregulation

• process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells

• hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

• hypoosmotic (hypotonic)

• isoosmotic (isotonic)

Page 3: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Homework: p.445

#11. Explain the difference between the terms “hypertonic” and “hyperosmotic”.

Page 4: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Unicellular Organisms

• water balance is often maintained by contractile vacuoles

• video of Paramecium:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mTXRcbjuYGU

Page 5: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Excretion

• eliminating waste is important for all living organisms

Page 6: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Types of Waste

• Our bodies eliminate wastes through various organs:

• lungs (CO2)

• large intestine (solid wastes)

• liver (transforms toxins for removal)

• kidneys (soluble wastes)

Page 7: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Nitrogenous Wastes

• mostly from deamination

• animals that live in water can remove ammonia with lots of water

• mammals, some reptiles, most amphibians form urea

• birds and some invertebrates produce uric acid

Page 8: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Homework: p.445

#4. Explain the advantages & disadvantages for terrestrial animals of creating urea rather than other forms of nitrogenous waste.

#5. Why is it an advantage for birds to create uric acid as their nitrogenous waste compound? (Think of flight.)

Page 9: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Human Excretory System

Page 10: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Renal Blood Flow)

• blood is brought to the kidneys by the renal arteries

• filtered blood leaves the kidneys through the renal veins

Page 11: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

The Urinary System

• kidneys can hold up to 25% of the body’s blood at a time

• kidneys filter the blood

• urine (with wastes and toxins) is conducted to the bladder through the ureters

Page 12: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)
Page 13: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Kidney Structure

Basic structure:• cortex• medulla• renal pelvis

Page 14: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Kidney Kiwi

Page 15: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Kidney Kiwi Dissection

Page 16: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Nephron

• the functional unit of the kidney is the nephron

• there are about 1 million nephrons in each kidney

Page 17: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)
Page 18: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)
Page 19: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)
Page 20: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Other links…

• Khan academy…this video starts off with the structure of the kidney & nephron, then goes into detail about the formation of urine (covered in 9.5)

• http://www.khanacademy.org/video/the-kidney-and-nephron?playlist=Biology

Page 21: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

How is urine formed?

Page 22: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Urine Formation

• filtration

• reabsorption

• secretion

• Simple overview of urine formation:• http://www.pennmedicine.org/encyclopedia/em_DisplayAnimatio

n.aspx?gcid=000136&ptid=17

Page 23: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Filtration

• higher blood pressure in glomerulus• water, ions, smaller dissolved molecules

(glucose, amino acids, urea) can move through the walls of the glomerulus

• your kidneys filter your entire blood plasma 65 times a day

Page 24: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Reabsorption

• ion pumps reabsorb Na+, K+, Cl- (active)

• active transport proteins reabsorb amino acids, glucose

• filtrate becomes hypoosmotic to interstitial fluid, so water is reabsorbed by osmosis and through aquaporins

Page 25: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Where?

• a lot of reabsorption occurs in the proximal convoluted tubule

• filtrate with high concentration of urea and other wastes enters loop of Henle and then distal convoluted tubule:– more water and ions (Na+& Cl-)are

reabsorbed

Page 26: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Where (cont’d)?

• collecting ducts are permeable to water but not salt ions, so more water is reabsorbed

• at bottom of medulla, urea is reabsorbed through passive urea transporters

Page 27: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Secretion

• H+ ions (active) to adjust blood pH (HCO3

- is also reabsorbed to balance)• products of detoxified poisons (passive)• water-soluble drugs (passive)• nitrogen-containing wastes (such as

small amounts of NH3)• in the proximal and distal convoluted

tubules

Page 28: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Animations

• Narrated animation on urine formation; good amount of detail:

• http://davisplus.fadavis.com/scanlon6e/Animations/animations.cfm?exercise=NephronFiltration&title=Nephron%20Filtration

• Narrated animation of structure & function; quite detailed:

• http://bcs.whfreeman.com/thelifewire/content/chp51/51020.html

Page 29: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Kidney Disorders

Page 30: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Urinalysis

• can be used to detect many metabolic and kidney disorders as well as urinary tract infections

• urine can be assessed using a dipstick or at a laboratory

Page 31: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Multiple Test Dipstick

Page 32: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Diabetes Mellitus

• Type 1 - body cannot produce insulin

• Type 2 - cells fail to use insulin properly

• gestational - hormones of pregnancy interfere with action of insulin

• urinalysis would show high levels of glucose (and greater volumes of urine)

Page 33: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Kidney Stones

• caused by precipitation of minerals, can be alkaline or acidic

• VERY painful

Page 34: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Kidney Stones - Treatment

• time…• lithotripsy (shock-

wave therapy)• ureteroscopy (and

placement of stent or surgical removal of stone)

Page 35: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Dialysis

• for low-functioning kidneys, dialysis machine can filter blood

Page 36: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)
Page 37: Water Balance & Excretion 9.4 & 9.5. Osmoregulation process of actively regulating the osmotic pressure of bodily fluids and cells hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

Homework: p.454

#2. What may be the reasons that the body normally uses two kidneys?

#3. Describe the flow of blood into and out of the kidneys. Compare the contents of the blood when entering and exiting the kidneys.

#9. What would be the result on the body if Na+, K+, and Cl- were not reabsorbed in the kidneys?